Sorry the question title isn't very clear, this is a challenging question to ask without providing a more concrete example. Consider the following scenario:

I have a number of friends whose birthdays are coming up on dates (d1..dn), and I've managed to come up with a number of gifts I'd like to purchase them of cost (c1..cn). Unfortunately, I only have a fixed amount of money (m) that I can save per day towards purchasing these gifts. The question I'd like to ask is:

What is the ideal distribution of savings per gift (mi, where the sum of mi from 1..n == m) in order to minimize the aggregate deviance between my friends' birthdays and the date in which I'll have saved enough money to purchase that gift.

What I'm looking for is either a solution to this problem, or a mapping to a solved problem that I can utilize to deterministically answer this question. Thanks for pondering it, and let me know if I can provide any additional clarification!

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Try asking this question on MathOverflow.net – Jason Punyon Feb 10 '10 at 19:35
what's a solution? Telling if the problem is NP-complete or not? – Guy Feb 14 '10 at 20:08
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I think you've stated a form of a knapsack problem with some additional complications - the knapsack problem is NP-Complete (p 247, Garey and Johnson). The basic knapsack problem is where you have a number of objects each with a volume and a value - you want to fill a knapsack of fixed volume with the objects to maximize the value without exceeding the knapsack capacity.

Given that you have stages (days) and resources (money) and the resources change by day while you decide what purchases to make, would lead me to a dynamic programming solution technique rather than a straight optimization model.

Could you clarify in comments "minimizing the deviance"? I'm not sure I understand that part.

BTW, mathoverflow.com is probably not helpful for this. If you look at algorithm questions, 50 on stackoverflow and 50 on mathoverflow, you'll find the questions (and answers) on stackoverflow have a lot more in common with the problem you are considering. There is a new site called OR Exchange, but there's not a lot of traffic there yet.

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